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A requirement for STAG2 in replication fork progression creates a targetable synthetic lethality in cohesin-mutant cancers.

Citation
Mondal, G., et al. “A Requirement For Stag2 In Replication Fork Progression Creates A Targetable Synthetic Lethality In Cohesin-Mutant Cancers.”. Nature Communications, p. 1686.
Author Gourish Mondal, Meredith Stevers, Benjamin Goode, Alan Ashworth, David A Solomon
Abstract

Cohesin is a multiprotein ring that is responsible for cohesion of sister chromatids and formation of DNA loops to regulate gene expression. Genomic analyses have identified that the cohesin subunit STAG2 is frequently inactivated by mutations in cancer. However, the reason STAG2 mutations are selected during tumorigenesis and strategies for therapeutically targeting mutant cancer cells are largely unknown. Here we show that STAG2 is essential for DNA replication fork progression, whereby STAG2 inactivation in non-transformed cells leads to replication fork stalling and collapse with disruption of interaction between the cohesin ring and the replication machinery as well as failure to establish SMC3 acetylation. As a consequence, STAG2 mutation confers synthetic lethality with DNA double-strand break repair genes and increased sensitivity to select cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents and PARP or ATR inhibitors. These studies identify a critical role for STAG2 in replication fork procession and elucidate a potential therapeutic strategy for cohesin-mutant cancers.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
10
Issue
1
Number of Pages
1686
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-019-09659-z
Alternate Journal
Nat Commun
PMID
30975996
PMCID
PMC6459917
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